Locking ring for pressure vessel

ABSTRACT

This invention relates to a locking ring for the closure plug of a pressure vessel for storing fluid under pressure and particularly of the type having a deformable partition such as a bladder therein. The closure plug has a flanged inner end of diameter slightly less than the diameter of the port of the pressure vessel into which it is to be inserted and the locking ring normally is of greater diameter than said port and is foldable for insertion through said port so that it may then be restored to its original shape to encompass the closure plug and restrain outward movement thereof from such port.

imited States =2 atent 1 1 3,687,165

Mercier *Aug. 29, 1972 [54] LOCKING RING FOR PRESSURE [56] References Cited VESSEL UNITED STATES PATENTS [72] Inventor: Jacques H, Mercier, 49 Rue 1 N 2,936,787 5/1960 Mercier ..138/3O ples, Paris, France 3,537,481 1 1/1970 Mercier ..277/178 Notice: The portion of the term of this FOREIGN PATENTS OR APPLICATIONS i ;;,g,f,f NOV 961,107 6/1964 Great Britain Primary Examiner-William F. ODea [22] Flled: July 1970 Assistant ExaminerRobert L. Smith [21] Appl. No.: 53,923 Att0rneyArthur B. Colvin Related US. Application Data [57] ABSTRACT This invention relates to a locking ring for the closure contlnuatlon-m-part of Sen plug of a pressure vessel for storing fluid under pres- 1967, and sure and particularly of the type having a deformable y 7, 1969, partition such as a bladder therein. The closure plug has a flanged inner end of diameter slightly less than 52 US. Cl. ..138/30, 85/8.8, 277/178, the diameter of the P of the Pressure vessel into 285/208 which it is to be inserted and the locking n'ng normally 51 1111. c1. ..F16l55/04, Fl6b 24/00 is of greater diameter than Said P and is foldable for [58] Field 0fSearch....277/l78,216; 138/30; 85/8.6, insertion through sald P so that it y then be 85/8.8; 287/DIG. 3; 285/208, 206

restored to its original shape to encompass the closure plug and restrain outward movement thereof from such port.

6 Claims, 3 Drawing Figures LOCKING RING FOR PRESSURE VESSEL This application is a continuation-in-part of copending application Ser. No. 613,660, filed Feb. 2, 1967 now U.S. Pat. No. 3,537,481, and Ser. No. 822,445, filed May 7, 1969 now U.S. Patent 3,640,172.

DESCRIPTION OF PRIOR ART As conducive to an understanding of the invention, it is noted that where a pressure container has an opening or port with a removable closure plug therein, the use of a threaded plug is undesirable in that the threads may become worn and stripped with likelihood of blowing out of the plug when high pressures are attained in the container. In addition, if such plug can be removed before substantially all of the pressure is relieved in the container, when the mechanic disassembling the container has partially released the plug, it may suddenly blow out and cause severe injury.

To overcome such difficulties, a plug may be utilized having a reduced neck defining a shoulder and forming an enlarged inner end portion of smaller outside diameter than the port so that it may be inserted therein. A locking member in the form of a ring encompassing the reduced neck portion of the plug, has an outer diameter greater than that of said port and an inner periphery overlapped by the shoulder of the enlarged end portion of the plug and is seated in position with rigid portions of the locking member intervening between the inner rim of the port and said shoulder. By means of any suitable retaining element, such as a nut screwed on the externally threaded neck of the plug, which protrudes from the port, the plug may be releasably, yet securely affixed to said container. As the locking member is of greater diameter than the port, in order that it may be inserted therethrough into the container, it is made deformable as by having portions thereof relatively displaceable.

Where, to permit such deformation, the locking member is of resilient metal having a split through the circumference thereof, such as a conventional split ring which may be of hardened spring steel, the pressure vessel bladder as it expands to expel liquid from the container, will come in contact with the portion of the surface of such ring which extends laterally outward from the shoulder of the plug and especially at high pressures, extrude through such split, thereby pinching or cutting the bladder with resultant destruction of the latter and failure of the pressure vessel.

In order to permit such deformation and provide a surface against which the pressure vessel bladder may abut which has no splits or discontinuities, as shown in U.S. Pat. Nos. 2,936,787 and 3,148,705, a locking member has been provided which comprises a plurality of arcuate segments arranged substantially in a ring, the adjacent ends of said segments being spaced from each other. The segments are desirably of hardened metal such as steel which will withstand the shearing action against the inner periphery of the locking member caused by the pressure on the enlarged end of the plug when the bladder is bearing thereon and the shearing action caused by the pressure of the locking member against the rim of the port. The segments are connected together by a resilient ring so as to be securely retained with respect thereto and so positioned that the top of the locking member will present an uninterrupted surface to the bladder, the resilient ring permitting relative displacement of portions of the locking member so that it may be deformed for insertion into the port, the locking member being self-restoring to its original shape.

Where the thickness of the resilient ring at the line of deformation or folding thereof for insertion is relatively great, such folding action will cause undue stress on the material of the resilient ring with resultant fatigue and possible tearing and consequent malfunctioning of the pressure vessel.

It is accordingly among the objects of the invention to provide an annular locking member for use with a pressure vessel having a closure plug associated therewith, which locking member may readily be fabricated at relatively low cost and may readily be deformed for insertion into an opening of diameter less than the unfolded diameter of the locking member, which locking member will provide an uninterrupted resilient surface and may be folded and unfolded without fatigue of the material of the resilient portion thereof at the region of folding which would cause tearing and resultant inoperativeness.

In accordance with the invention, the closure plug is retained in position by a circular locking member which comprises rigid arcuate segments and a resilient ring bonded to the top surface of said segments. The resilient ring which extends over the rigid segments presents an uninterrupted top surface and the portion of the resilient ring extending from the top surface of the rigid segments below such top surface has slits therethrough aligned with the spaces between the ends of the segments.

In the accompanying drawings in which are shown one or more of various possible embodiments of the several features of the invention,

FIG. 1 is a longitudinal sectional view of a pressure vessel with parts broken away;

FIG. 2 is a transverse sectional view taken along line 2-2 of FIG. 1, and

FIG. 3 is a perspective view of a locking member.

Referring now to the drawings, the locking member, according to the invention, is illustratively shown in FIG. 1 incorporated in a pressure vessel such as a pressure accumulator. This accumulator desirably comprises a rigid container 10 of material such as steel which is capable of withstanding high pressure.

The container has opposed ports, the upper port being designed to receive a standard pneumatic valve 12 and the lower port designated by the numeral 11 serving as a liquid port.

Positioned in the container in conventional manner is a deformable partition, illustratively a bladder 13, the latter desirably being of rubber either natural or synthetic and capable of expanding in order to force liquid from the container and defining a gas chamber 14 and a liquid chamber 15 on opposed sides thereof The port 11 desirably has a cylindrical outlet plug 16 positioned therein, the latter having a longitudinal bore therethrough and having a flange 17 at its inner end defining an annular shoulder 17a and a reduced neck portion 17b. The outer diameter of the flange is slightly less than the diameter of the port 11 so that it may readily be inserted therethrough and the neck 17b is of length such that it may protrude from port 11.

The plug 16 has a transverse wall 16a with passageways 16b therethrough and also has an axial bore through which extends the stem of a poppet valve 22 normally urged outwardly by coil spring 24, the periphery of valve 22 being designed to seat on the bevelled inner surface 23 of the bore of the plug.

The outlet plug 16 is affixed to the container by a locking member 18 in the form of a ring constructed so that it may readily be deformed for insertion through port 11 into the container 10. As shown in FIGS. 1 to 3, for example, the locking member 18 comprises a resilient ring 25 and a plurality of arcuate segments, illustratively two in number and designated by the numerals 26, 27, preferably of hardened metal such as steel. Each of the segments is slightly less than 180 of are so that when juxtaposed to form a ring, the adjacent ends a, b may be spaced from each other as at 28 as is clearly shown in FIG. 2, for example. The ring formed by such juxtaposed segments has an inner diameter shown at 18a in FIG. 1, but slightly larger than the outer diameter of neck 17b of plug 16 so that the inner wall 18a of said segments 26, 27 may snugly encompass neck 17b with the shoulder 17a of the plug 16 resting on the inner periphery 170 of said segments. The outer diameter of the ring formed by said juxtaposed segments 26, 27 is greater than that of the port 11 so that the oblique or bevelled portion 19a of the segments 26, 27 which conform generally to the shape of the inner surface 19 of the container 10 adjacent port 11 ma seat thereon.

The undersurface of each of the segments 26, 27 adjacent the inner periphery thereof each has a cylindrical lower section defining an arcuate hub 30 of width substantially equal to the difference between the outer diameter of neck 17b and the diameter of port 11 so that said hub, when positioned between neck 17b and port 11 will center the plug 16in said port 11.

More particularly, referring to FIG. 1, each of the segments 26, 27 comprises the arcuate hub 30, and an arcuate section rising therefrom to define the oblique or bevelled portion 19a. The outer periphery 19b of each of the segments is rounded as shown and the top surface of each segment is flat. The resilient ring 25, as clearly shown in FIG. 1, has an inner annular portion 25a which is bonded as at 25b to the top surface of the rigid segments 26, 27. In addition, the resilient ring has an oblique or bevelled periphery 250 which extends below the plane of the top surface of the rigid segments 26, 27 as at 31. The inner periphery of such downwardly extending portion 31 of the resilient ring is preferably curved to conform to the curvature of the rounded periphery of the rigid segments and such curved portion may either be bonded or unbonded to the rigid segments.

It is to be noted that the contour of the bevelled periphery of the resilient ring 25 is such that when secured to the rigid arcuate segments such bevelled periphery 25c will form an extension of the bevelled surface 19a of the rigid segments.

As shown in FIGS. 1, 2 and 3, the resilient ring 25 has a pair of diametrically opposed slits 29 therethrough which are aligned with the spaces 28 between the adjacent ends aa and b-b of the segments. The slits 29 extend from the bottom edge of the resilient ring upwardly to a plane substantially aligned with the plane of the top surface of the segments.

It is to be noted, referring to F IG. 1, that the width of the top surface 39 of the resilient ring 25 is such that when the locking member 18 is positioned in the container 10 such surface 39 will fill the space between the inner surface of the container adjacent the port 11 and the adjacent portion of the flanged end 17 of the plug 16. Consequently, since the slits 29 do not extend through the top surface 39 of the resilient ring, a sub stantially continuous surface will be provided which the expanding bladder 13 may contact during operation of the equipment.

In order to provide a liquid-tight seal between the neck 17b of plug 16 and the wall surface of port 11, a resilient sealing ring 20, preferably an O ring, encompasses the neck 17b between hub 30 and the reduced diameter portion 41 of a collar 42 which encompasses the neck 17b. A nut 21 screwed on the externally threaded portion 21' of neck 17b, when tightened, will securely retain the parts in assembled relationship.

In assembling the accumulator, the bladder 13 is passed through the port 11 of the empty container 10. The valve stem (not shown) secured to the bladder is pushed through an opening in the upper end of the container 10 and secured thereto by means of nut 12. The plug 16 is then passed through the port 11 and the locking member 18 is deformed by being folded in two along a diametric line extending through the aligned spaces and slits 28, 29, such folding being permitted by the reason of the fact that the rigid arcuate segments 26, 27 are so spaced from each other.

The deformed locking member 18 may readily be passed through the port 11 into the container and it is then released. By reason of the resilience of the folded resilient ring 25, it will assume its original ring-like shape so that it may readily be passed around the neck portion 17b of the plug 16. The plug 16 can then be drawn outwardly until its shoulder 17a seats against the inner periphery 17c of the segments 26, 27 and the bevelled surface 19a of the segments seat on the inner surface 19 of container 10 about port 11. The sealing ring 20 and collar 42 may then be placed around the neck 17b and moved therealong until the ring 20 is against hub 30. The nut 21 is then screwed on neck 17b and tightened securely to retain the shoulder 17a of the plug against the inner periphery 17c of the segments and the undersurface of the segments against the inner surface of the container 10 about port 11, the O ring 20 providing a dependable seal between the neck 17b and the wall of port 11.

By reason of the slits 29 in the lower portion of the resilient ring, the latter may readily be folded without tearing of the material of the resilient ring. Thus, due to the fact that the resilient ring 25 is relatively thick in cross section, when it is folded to permit insertion through the port 11, the material adjacent the fold line would normally be stretched considerably due to such thickness. However, by reason of the slits 29 which extend through the lower portion of the resilient ring, when the latter is folded, the material at the upper end 29 of the slits 29 will only stretch slightly thereby avoiding tearing thereof and enhancing the life of the sealing member 19.

It is also to be noted that the presence of the slits 29 does not weaken the resilient ring for in use the portion of the material adjacent the slits are not under tension,

but when the expanded bladder presses against the upper surface 39 of the resilient ring it will tend to close the slits due to the elasticity of the ring.

With the construction above described, it is apparent that by reason of the fact that the thickness of the resilient ring at the fold line thereof has been reduced by reason of diametric slits 29, the locking member may readily be folded without undue strain on the material of the resilient ring adjacent the line of fold with resultant prevention of tearing of such resilient ring.

Having thus described my invention, what I claim as new and desire to secure by Letters Patent of the United States is:

1. in a pressure vessel of the type having a port, a deformable partition secured in said pressure vessel and adapted to move toward such port and a hollow flanged plug in said port, said flange defining a shoulder; the combination therewith of a deformable locking member for said plug, said locking member comprising a plurality of rigid arcuate segments defining a ring of inner diameter less than that of the port and of outer diameter greater than that of such port, adjacent ends of said segments being in relatively close juxtaposition, the undersurface of said segments adjacent the outer periphery thereof having a configuration complementary to that of the inner surface of the pressure vessel adjacent its port and defining a relatively wide surface adapted to seat directly on said inner surface of said port, a ring of resilient material bonded to the top surface of said ring defined by said juxtaposed arcuate segments, whereby the top surface of said resilient ring will define a continuous annular surface coaxial with the ring formed by said segments, each of said segments having a top surface of width such as to extend inwardly of the inner periphery of said resilient ring whereby the exposed surfaces of the top surface of said segments define a retaining shoulder for such plug, the width of the top surface of said resilient ring being such that its outer periphery extends laterally beyond the outer periphery of said rigid arcuate segments, whereby said top surface of the resilient ring when the deformable partition is thereagainst, will prevent extrusion through the spaces between the segments and the inner wall of the pressure vessel as well as through the spaces between adjacent ends of said segments, said resilient ring having radial slits therethrough extending from the lower edge thereof at least to the plane of the top surface of each of said segments and aligned with the spaces between said segments.

2. The combination set forth in claim 1 in which the configuration of the outer periphery of said resilient ring substantially conforms to the configuration of the outer periphery of said segments.

3. The combination set forth in claim 1 in which the outer periphery of said resilient ring and the outer periphery of said segments are bevelled and the lower edge of said resilient ring extends below the plane of the top surfaces of the rigid segments.

4. .The combination set forth in claim 3 in which the portion of the resilient ring extending below the plane of the top surface of the rigid segments is bonded to the adjacent surface of the periphery of said rigid segments.

5. As an article of manufacture, a foldable locking member comprising a ring of resilient material, said ring having an uninterrupted top surface, a plurality of rigid arcuate segments each having a flat top surface bonded to the bottom surface of said resilient ring, said rigid segments defining a ring with the adjacent ends of each of the segments being slightly spaced from each other defining a slot therebetween, the inner periphery of said resilient ring being of larger diameter than the inner periphery of the ring defined by said rigid arcuate segments to form an annular retaining shoulder, the outer periphery of said resilient ring being of larger diameter than the outer periphery of the ring defined by said rigid arcuate segments, said resilient ring having a portion of its outer periphery extending below the plane of the top surface of the ring defined by said rigid arcuate segments, said outer periphery of said resilient ring having radial slits therethrough aligned with the slots between said rigid arcuate segments and extending from the lower edge of said resilient ring at least to a plane substantially aligned with the plane of the top surface of the ring defined by said rigid arcuate segments.

6. The combination set forth in claim 5 in which the inner periphery of the portion of the resilient ring extending from the lower edge thereof to the plane substantially aligned with the plane of the top surface of the ring defined by said rigid arcuate segments is bonded to the adjacent outer periphery of said ring defined by said rigid arcuate segments. 

1. In a pressure vessel of the type having a port, a deformable partition secured in said pressure vessel and adapted to move toward such port and a hollow flanged plug in said port, said flange defining a shoulder; the combination therewith of a deformable locking member for said plug, said locking member comprising a plurality of rigid arcuate segments defining a ring of inner diameter less Than that of the port and of outer diameter greater than that of such port, adjacent ends of said segments being in relatively close juxtaposition, the undersurface of said segments adjacent the outer periphery thereof having a configuration complementary to that of the inner surface of the pressure vessel adjacent its port and defining a relatively wide surface adapted to seat directly on said inner surface of said port, a ring of resilient material bonded to the top surface of said ring defined by said juxtaposed arcuate segments, whereby the top surface of said resilient ring will define a continuous annular surface coaxial with the ring formed by said segments, each of said segments having a top surface of width such as to extend inwardly of the inner periphery of said resilient ring whereby the exposed surfaces of the top surface of said segments define a retaining shoulder for such plug, the width of the top surface of said resilient ring being such that its outer periphery extends laterally beyond the outer periphery of said rigid arcuate segments, whereby said top surface of the resilient ring when the deformable partition is thereagainst, will prevent extrusion through the spaces between the segments and the inner wall of the pressure vessel as well as through the spaces between adjacent ends of said segments, said resilient ring having radial slits therethrough extending from the lower edge thereof at least to the plane of the top surface of each of said segments and aligned with the spaces between said segments.
 2. The combination set forth in claim 1 in which the configuration of the outer periphery of said resilient ring substantially conforms to the configuration of the outer periphery of said segments.
 3. The combination set forth in claim 1 in which the outer periphery of said resilient ring and the outer periphery of said segments are bevelled and the lower edge of said resilient ring extends below the plane of the top surfaces of the rigid segments.
 4. The combination set forth in claim 3 in which the portion of the resilient ring extending below the plane of the top surface of the rigid segments is bonded to the adjacent surface of the periphery of said rigid segments.
 5. As an article of manufacture, a foldable locking member comprising a ring of resilient material, said ring having an uninterrupted top surface, a plurality of rigid arcuate segments each having a flat top surface bonded to the bottom surface of said resilient ring, said rigid segments defining a ring with the adjacent ends of each of the segments being slightly spaced from each other defining a slot therebetween, the inner periphery of said resilient ring being of larger diameter than the inner periphery of the ring defined by said rigid arcuate segments to form an annular retaining shoulder, the outer periphery of said resilient ring being of larger diameter than the outer periphery of the ring defined by said rigid arcuate segments, said resilient ring having a portion of its outer periphery extending below the plane of the top surface of the ring defined by said rigid arcuate segments, said outer periphery of said resilient ring having radial slits therethrough aligned with the slots between said rigid arcuate segments and extending from the lower edge of said resilient ring at least to a plane substantially aligned with the plane of the top surface of the ring defined by said rigid arcuate segments.
 6. The combination set forth in claim 5 in which the inner periphery of the portion of the resilient ring extending from the lower edge thereof to the plane substantially aligned with the plane of the top surface of the ring defined by said rigid arcuate segments is bonded to the adjacent outer periphery of said ring defined by said rigid arcuate segments. 